There is no limit to the number of extra innings in a Baseball game. The game should continue until an inning ends with one team in the lead. Games have been stopped due to various reasons including curfew and darkness (more common before stadiums had lights). These games are generally resumed at a later date, though just as with games postponed due to rain or other causes, sometimes a postponed game is never resumed. The longest professional game was 33 innings, between the triple-A teams the Pawtuck Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings on April 18, 1981. The longest Major League Baseball game was 26 innings, between the Boston Braves and the Brooklyn Dodgers, on May 1, 1920. The game was called due to darkness, and was never resumed (sort of like the Boston Braves and the Brooklyn Dodgers would be decades later).
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There is no limit of extra innings in professional baseball. Whether it is a regular season game, the All-Star game or the World Series. The limiting factor is the number of players on the team. Once a player comes out of the game they cannot go back in. The game either ends by one team scoring more runs or in a tie when the player rosters are used up. Tie games are extremely rare at all levels of baseball, except t-ball.
Yes, Spring Training can have extra innings but typically it won't go on for much longer than 10 innings due to avoiding wearing pitchers out while they're warming up for the Regular Season.